Gear news
You are looking at: Home : Gear news

Put Everest On Danger List

Environmental campaigners including leading mountaineers are calling for Everest to be added to a UNESCO danger list as global warming threatens to devestate the area.


Posted: 17 November 2004
by Jon

Environmental campaigners includingChris Bonington, Reinhold Messner and Stephen Venables are calling on UNESCO to place Everest National Park (Sagarmatha National Park) on the World Heritage Danger List.

The melting of glaciers in the region has created huge lakes of meltwater often held back only by barriers of unstable morraine. The danger is that at some point many of these natural dams will give way creating devestating floods. 'Both the beauty of this magnificent area and the livelihoods of its inhabitants are threatened by global warming,' says Bonington.

A petition due to be delivered to Unesco in Paris tomorrow, Thursday, is aimed at drawing attention to the problem and by putting Everest on the danger list, making UNESCO assess the glacial lakes in Nepal and taking steps to stabilise the most dangerous of them.

The situation is echoed in the Peruvian Andes where the region around Huaraz has been devestated repeatedly by alluvions caused by the combination of earthquakes and unstable glacial lakes.

Prakash Sharma, Director of Pro Public (Friends of the Earth Nepal) said: `Mount Everest is a powerful symbol of the natural world, not just in Nepal. If this mountain is threatened by climate change, then we know the situation is deadly serious. If we fail to act, we are failing future generations and denying them the chance to enjoy the beauty of mother earth.'

The effects on Nepal's trekking industry would be massive and serious. Pemba Dorjee Sherpa, the fastest ever climber of Everest, who has climbed the mountain four times said: `Last year when Edmund Hillary came to Everest, he told me that so much snow had melted in the fifty years since he first climbed Everest.

'In 1953 snow and ice had reached all the way to base camp, but now it ends five miles above. Everest is losing its natural beauty. If this continues, then tourists won't come any more. Our communities rely on tourism. It's my livelihood, as a tour guide and climber, and if we lose this, there will be nothing for our children.'

There's a BBC news report on the story at news.bbc.co.uk in the South Asia section.


Previous article
Have you won a Zealot jacket or Subxero pack?
Next article
Ranulph Fiennes To Climb Everest


TwitterStumbleUponFacebookDiggRedditGoogle

Related Content

Related Products


Discuss this story

Talkback: Put Everest On Danger List

First Name:
Last Name:
Nickname:
Email:
Security Image:
Enter the code shown:

I agree to the site's Terms and Conditions & Code of Conduct: